Mac and cheese sales spike

Published: Feb. 5, 2008 at 3:31 PM

NORTHFIELD, Ill., Feb. 5 (UPI) -- Sales of boxed macaroni and cheese, a product category led by Northfield, Ill., based Kraft Foods, have experienced a significant rise.

The product, which debuted 70 years ago, posted 10 percent growth in 2007, due in part to soaring sales of single-serve microwaveable Easy Mac cups, which experienced a 50 percent rise in sales for the year, the Chicago Sun-Times reported Tuesday.

Harry Balzer, vice president of consumer research firm NPD Group, said about one-third of the U.S. population and half of the country's children will feast on macaroni and cheese at some point during the next two weeks. That number marks a significant increase from 1984, when about 30 percent of the U.S. population and 40 percent of children in the country would have snacked on the popular pasta dish in a two-week period.

"It's almost always a main meal," he said.

Kraft introduced its first stovetop macaroni and cheese dinners, which included cheese sauce packets, in 1937, a time when people in the United States were searching for foods to help them compensate for dairy rations and difficulty purchasing meat.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
COL BKB: Georgetown 97, Lafayette 64 (11 min)
McIlroy/McDowell lead dwindles in China (18 min)
Gold coin found in Ill. Christmas kettle (23 min)
Big public holiday parties out this year (53 min)
Artist documents decade of his life
Woods's wife allegedly assaulted him
UPI NewsTrack Entertainment News
fark
Hero: Danvers HS students want to sell "Free Meep" shirts to raise money for scholarship. Asinine:...
In the never-ending quest by the government to encourage everyone buy new stuff, comes "Cash for...
It was Mrs. Woods, in the driveway, with the golf club
Can you be blamed for sleepwalking crimes? It's not news, it's fearmongeri...er...ABC News
They took away radio traffic reporters' airplanes, and now they're taking away their radio too
The majority of working mothers say they would prefer to work part-time. Only 21 percent of working...